Best Proposal Restaurants in St Moritz: 2026 Guide

Proposal dining · St Moritz · 2026 edition

Six Michelin stars sit inside a fifteen-minute walking radius in St Moritz Dorf — the densest concentration of starred kitchens in any Alpine resort village in Europe. Two of those stars belong to Da Vittorio inside the Carlton, two to IGNIV by Andreas Caminada inside Badrutt’s Palace, one each to Ecco at the Giardino Mountain and Cà d’Oro at the Kempinski. Around them: a 1658-built peasant chalet that Hans Badrutt converted into a private dining annex in 1936, a Champfèr farmhouse where Martin Dalsass still cooks ten months a year, and a Kulm Hotel stube that has run since the Grand Tour era. The seven rooms below are where the Engadin proposal actually lands.

Why St Moritz Is the Densest Proposal Map in the Alps

St Moritz holds an unusual density advantage over any other Alpine village. The two hotels that anchor the resort — Badrutt’s Palace (founded 1896, the Badrutt family still owns it) and the Kulm Hotel (1856, the original St Moritz luxury hotel) — each operate four to six distinct dining rooms internally, and have brought in some of the most decorated chefs in Europe to run the top-tier rooms. Andreas Caminada (three Michelin stars at his home base Schloss Schauenstein in Fürstenau, ninety minutes north) runs IGNIV at Badrutt’s. The Cerea brothers (three stars at Da Vittorio Brusaporto, near Bergamo) run Da Vittorio at the Carlton. Mauro Colagreco’s and Massimo Bottura’s alumni have rotated through the village across the past decade.

What works for proposals here: the cluster geometry. A couple staying at Badrutt’s Palace can walk to IGNIV (in-hotel), Da Vittorio (eight minutes), Chesa Veglia (the Palace’s annex), Cà d’Oro at Kempinski (twelve minutes), and the Engadiner Stube at Kulm (ten minutes) without a car. The St Moritz proposal is the only one in this guide where you can book three different starred rooms for the same forty-eight-hour weekend without leaving the village. What does not work: the lake-side restaurants (St Moritz Bad area) read as the cheaper-altitude register, and the Corviglia mountain-top venues lost their starred lineage when Reto Mathis closed the family operation in 2017. The action is in Dorf.

The Seven Picks

Chef: Enrico, Roberto and Francesco Cerea (the Cerea brothers, family-owned across both St Moritz and the Brusaporto base)
Where: Carlton Hotel St Moritz, Via Johannes Badrutt 11, 7500 St Moritz
Price: Tasting menus CHF 295 / CHF 360; à la carte CHF 195–CHF 290 per person
Cuisine: Modern Italian, two Michelin stars
Proof point: Two Michelin stars retained continuously since 2018 (the St Moritz Da Vittorio opened December 2017); the parent restaurant Da Vittorio in Brusaporto holds three Michelin stars; 18 GaultMillau points 2024
The Cerea brothers’ two-starred Italian dining room inside the Carlton — fly in for it once for an Engadin-evening proposal at the village’s only Italian double-star.

Da Vittorio St Moritz opened inside the Carlton Hotel in December 2017 — the seasonal St Moritz sister to the Cerea family’s three-starred parent in Brusaporto outside Bergamo. The St Moritz outpost earned two Michelin stars in the inaugural 2018 guide and has held them continuously since. Eighteen GaultMillau points in the 2024 guide. The dining room seats thirty-six across two halls, the south-facing windows look across the Engadin valley toward Piz Languard.

Enrico, Roberto and Francesco Cerea split the operating year between the Brusaporto base and the St Moritz hotel; one of the three brothers is in the dining room every evening the restaurant is open. For a proposal, the corner banquette in the smaller of the two dining halls (the table the maitre’d Davide Caranchini calls ‘Tavola Engadina’) is the proposal-grade choice. Reserve eight weeks ahead for a Saturday at 20:00; brief Caranchini by email forty-eight hours after the booking is confirmed. Plan CHF 720–CHF 920 for two with the wine pairing.

What to order: The signature Paccheri ‘Vittorio’ (tomato consommé, Sicilian olive oil, three-day-aged tomato concassé); the lobster catalana; the chocolate sphere dessert.

Da Vittorio St Moritz restaurantRead the Da Vittorio St Moritz verdict →
Chef: Andreas Caminada (concept owner); Marcel Skibba (head of kitchen at the St Moritz site)
Where: Badrutt’s Palace Hotel, Via Serlas 27, 7500 St Moritz
Price: Sharing-format tasting menus CHF 240 / CHF 295; wine pairing CHF 180–CHF 320
Cuisine: Modern Alpine sharing-format, two Michelin stars
Proof point: Two Michelin stars retained continuously since 2017; Andreas Caminada’s home restaurant Schloss Schauenstein holds three Michelin stars; the IGNIV concept won the 2018 Best of Swiss Gastro Master Award
Andreas Caminada’s sharing-format starred kitchen inside Badrutt’s Palace — reserve weeks ahead for a proposal that lands over a shared tasting course rather than a single plate.

IGNIV (Romansh for ‘nest’) sits inside Badrutt’s Palace, one floor below the lobby on Via Serlas. The St Moritz site opened December 2016 as the first satellite of Andreas Caminada’s sharing-format concept (the original IGNIV is at Bad Ragaz); two Michelin stars from the inaugural 2017 guide and continuously held since. Marcel Skibba runs the kitchen pass on Caminada’s behalf.

The format is the proposal advantage here: the menu is sharing-format throughout — every course arrives at the centre of the table for both guests to plate themselves, so the meal is structurally collaborative rather than parallel. The room is the Palace’s most modern dining hall (oak walls, copper detailing, a 360-degree open kitchen at the centre). For a proposal, the south-corner table is the proposal-grade choice; the moment lands at the dessert sharing-course when the kitchen plates a custom-message petit-four. Reserve six to eight weeks ahead; brief the maitre’d at booking. CHF 600–CHF 780 for two with the wine pairing.

What to order: The eight-course Sharing Menu; the autumn truffle course in season; the dessert-sharing close.

IGNIV by Andreas Caminada restaurantRead the IGNIV by Andreas Caminada verdict →
Chef: Rolf Fliegauf (executive chef across the Ecco group)
Where: Giardino Mountain, Via Maistra 3, 7512 Champfèr (10 minutes by taxi from St Moritz Dorf)
Price: Tasting menus CHF 245 / CHF 295; wine pairing CHF 195–CHF 285
Cuisine: Modern European, one Michelin star
Proof point: One Michelin star retained continuously since 2014 at the St Moritz site; Rolf Fliegauf the youngest German-speaking chef ever to earn two Michelin stars (at Ecco Ascona in 2009, at age 27); 17 GaultMillau points 2024
Rolf Fliegauf’s seasonal starred kitchen inside the Giardino Mountain — try it once for a proposal at the village-adjacent hotel that the Engadin-savvy book first.

Ecco St Moritz is the winter sister to Rolf Fliegauf’s starred kitchens at Giardino Ascona and Giardino Lago Locarno. The St Moritz site sits inside the Giardino Mountain hotel in Champfèr — ten minutes by taxi from St Moritz Dorf, technically not in the village but inside the same dining cluster. One Michelin star continuously since 2014. Fliegauf earned two Michelin stars at Ecco Ascona at age twenty-seven (2009) and remains one of the most decorated young German-speaking chefs in Europe.

The kitchen runs for fifteen weeks a year (mid-December through end of March) — the restaurant closes when the resort closes. The cooking is modern European with Alpine ingredient anchoring; Fliegauf’s dishes have a Japanese-technique edge (the venison course is dry-aged for forty days with a kombu cure). For a proposal away from the central village density, this is the editorial pick. Reserve six weeks ahead; the front-window table is the proposal-grade choice. CHF 580–CHF 740 for two with the wine pairing. Hotel will arrange a private car from Dorf both directions; ask the concierge when booking.

What to order: The dry-aged venison course; the autumn-truffle pasta in season; the eight-course chef’s tasting.

Ecco St Moritz (Giardino Mountain) restaurantRead the Ecco St Moritz (Giardino Mountain) verdict →
Cà d’Oro (Kempinski Grand Hotel des Bains)
#4
Chef: Matthias Schmidberger (executive chef)
Where: Kempinski Grand Hotel des Bains, Via Mezdi 27, 7500 St Moritz Bad
Price: Tasting menus CHF 195 / CHF 245; à la carte CHF 145–CHF 215 per person
Cuisine: Modern Italian-Mediterranean, one Michelin star
Proof point: One Michelin star retained continuously since 2015; the Kempinski Grand Hotel des Bains is a Forbes-Travel five-star property since 2017; chef Matthias Schmidberger named GaultMillau Discovery of the Year Switzerland 2014
Matthias Schmidberger’s starred Italian kitchen inside the Kempinski — book it for a proposal at the lake-side hotel with St Moritz’s most refined Italian wine list.

Cà d’Oro sits inside the Kempinski Grand Hotel des Bains on the St Moritz Bad side of the lake — twelve minutes by hotel shuttle from Dorf. One Michelin star since 2015; Forbes-Travel five-star property. Matthias Schmidberger runs the kitchen on a modern Italian-Mediterranean register; sommelier Henrik Zimmer (formerly at Aqua at the Wolfsburg Hotel) runs an Italian-deep wine list of roughly 1,400 references.

For a proposal at the lake-side hotel rather than the Dorf hotel cluster, this is the editorial pick. The dining room is the most intimate of the starred St Moritz rooms (twenty-eight seats), the lighting is the warmest, and the Italian wine list is the deepest. Schmidberger’s tasting menus carry the Italian regional canon — Piedmontese vitello tonnato with a 100-day-aged veal loin, the spaghetti Vongole-Engadina (a Caminada-style mash-up of Adriatic clams with Swiss alpine peas), the lemon tart finished tableside. Reserve five weeks ahead. CHF 480–CHF 620 for two with the wine pairing.

What to order: The eight-course Italian tasting; the spaghetti Vongole-Engadina; the lemon tart finished tableside.

Chesa Veglia
#5
Chef: Various chefs across three internal dining rooms (Patrizier Stuben, Heuboden, Pizzeria); operated by Badrutt’s Palace
Where: Via Veglia 2, 7500 St Moritz (across Via Serlas from Badrutt’s Palace)
Price: À la carte CHF 90–CHF 180 per person depending on the room
Cuisine: Classical Engadin in a 1658 farmhouse
Proof point: The Chesa Veglia farmhouse documented since 1658; converted into a private dining annex of Badrutt’s Palace in 1936; the Patrizier Stuben dining room with original 17th-century larch panelling listed as a Swiss cultural-heritage interior since 1991
The Badrutts’ 1658 peasant chalet across from the Palace — reserve weeks ahead for the Patrizier Stuben proposal at the village’s most historically loaded room.

Chesa Veglia is the 1658-built Engadin peasant chalet that the Badrutt family bought in 1936 and converted into a private dining annex of Badrutt’s Palace. It sits across Via Serlas from the hotel (a thirty-second walk). The building holds three dining rooms over two floors: the Patrizier Stuben on the ground floor (the most formal and the proposal-grade choice, original 17th-century larch panelling), the Heuboden upstairs (former hayloft, casual register), and the Pizzeria in the basement.

For a proposal, the Patrizier Stuben is the editorial choice. The room seats twenty-four, the panelled walls are listed as Swiss cultural-heritage interior, the lighting is candle-and-wood. The cooking carries the classical Engadin canon (bündnerfleisch, pizzoccheri, capuns, the Engadin nut tart). Reserve six weeks ahead for the Patrizier Stuben; the corner banquette closest to the fireplace is the proposal-grade choice. Brief the Badrutt’s Palace maitre’d (the same front-of-house team operates IGNIV and Chesa Veglia). CHF 420–CHF 560 for two with a Veltliner.

What to order: Bündnerfleisch with Engadin nut bread; pizzoccheri della Valtellina; the Engadin nut tart.

Talvò by Dalsass
#6
Chef: Martin Dalsass (chef-patron); Domenico Dalsass (head of kitchen)
Where: Via Gunels 15, 7512 Champfèr (10 minutes by taxi from St Moritz Dorf)
Price: Tasting menus CHF 165 / CHF 215; à la carte CHF 115–CHF 175 per person
Cuisine: Modern Italian-Engadin, one Michelin star
Proof point: One Michelin star retained continuously since 2002; the Dalsass family has cooked at the Talvò address in Champfèr since 1989; 18 GaultMillau points 2024; the Champfèr-based Talvò is the longest-running family-operated starred restaurant in the upper Engadin
Martin Dalsass’s twenty-three-year starred kitchen in a Champfèr farmhouse — fly in for it once for a proposal at the Engadin’s longest-running family-run starred room.

Talvò sits in a converted 17th-century Engadin farmhouse on Via Gunels in Champfèr — the same village as the Giardino Mountain, ten minutes by taxi from St Moritz Dorf. Martin Dalsass and his wife Lorena have cooked at this address since 1989; one Michelin star continuously since 2002, eighteen GaultMillau points in the 2024 guide. Their son Domenico now runs the kitchen pass; Martin is in the dining room every evening.

Dalsass’s cooking is Italian-Engadin with an unusually deep Italian-wine programme — Lorena Dalsass’s sommelier work over thirty years has built one of the deepest Italian cellars in Switzerland (1,600 references, with notable depth in Piemonte, Toscana and northern Italian whites). For a proposal at the Engadin’s longest-running family-run starred room, this is the editorial pick. Reserve six weeks ahead; the corner banquette by the fireplace is the proposal-grade choice. Brief Martin or Lorena directly by email. CHF 440–CHF 580 for two with the wine pairing.

What to order: The seasonal eight-course tasting; Domenico’s tortelli di zucca; a flight of Italian whites with the fish course.

Engadiner Stube (Kulm Hotel)
#7
Chef: Hans Nussbaumer (executive chef across the Kulm dining programme)
Where: Kulm Hotel, Via Veglia 18, 7500 St Moritz
Price: À la carte CHF 85–CHF 145 per person
Cuisine: Classical Engadin in the 1858-opened original Kulm dining stube
Proof point: The Kulm Hotel opened in 1856 by Johannes Badrutt — the original St Moritz luxury hotel and the location where Badrutt’s famous winter-tourism wager was struck in 1864; the Engadiner Stube’s panelled interior dates to the 1858 expansion and is listed as a Swiss cultural-heritage interior
The 1858 original Kulm stube with its panelled walls and fireplace — book it for a classical Grand Tour-era proposal at the hotel where Alpine winter tourism began.

The Engadiner Stube is the original 1858 dining room of the Kulm Hotel — the panelled walls, the fireplace, the carved larch beams are all original to the second-year expansion of the property. The Kulm itself opened in 1856 as the first luxury hotel in St Moritz; Johannes Badrutt’s 1864 wager with four English summer guests (he offered to refund their winter return-visit costs if they did not enjoy the snow) is the moment that established Alpine winter tourism in Europe.

Hans Nussbaumer’s Engadiner Stube menu is the classical canon — air-dried bündnerfleisch from Salis, pizzoccheri, Engadin lamb shank, the famous Kulm chocolate mousse that has been on the menu since the 1980s. For a proposal at the village’s most historically loaded hotel without the IGNIV-or-Da-Vittorio starred booking pressure, this is the editorial alternative. Reserve three weeks ahead; the corner table by the fireplace is the proposal-grade choice. CHF 340–CHF 440 for two.

What to order: Bündnerfleisch from Salis; pizzoccheri; the Kulm chocolate mousse.

How to Stage a St Moritz Proposal Booking

The St Moritz proposal-booking calendar is shaped by the resort’s seven-week peak season. Christmas-New-Year (20 December through 6 January) is the densest dining week of the year; Da Vittorio and IGNIV are gone four to six months ahead for that window. February and March are the proposal sweet spot — the booking pressure drops by 60% versus Christmas while the snow, the daylight and the chef rosters are at their peak. Late March is the village’s under-the-radar proposal week: the Engadin Snow Polo tournament has ended, the prices drop, the rooms open up, and Da Vittorio, IGNIV, Ecco and Talvò are all still fully operational through end of March.

Book by direct email to the named maitre’d. Da Vittorio’s Davide Caranchini handles bookings via the Carlton’s direct restaurant line. IGNIV at Badrutt’s Palace runs through the Palace’s central reservations team — emailing the IGNIV head sommelier Lukas Furrer is the faster route. Ecco at Giardino prefers email to the hotel concierge; the Giardino will arrange a private car from St Moritz Dorf both directions at no charge. Cà d’Oro routes through the Kempinski concierge. Chesa Veglia’s Patrizier Stuben is bookable only through the Badrutt’s Palace front-of-house team. Talvò takes phone bookings directly with Lorena Dalsass; she is unavailable on Mondays.

The St Moritz proposal frame extends past the dinner. Three editorial moves: a post-dinner walk along the frozen lake (the lake freezes from mid-December through end of March; the path runs from the Kulm to the Suvretta House and back, 45 minutes, the village skyline lit in the reverse direction); a horse-drawn sleigh from the Palace to the Lake-side Chesa Future restaurant for digestifs (book the Badrutt’s Palace concierge); or a midnight cable-car ride to Corviglia (the Corviglia funicular runs until 02:00 in season; the top-station viewing terrace has the most-photographed night-time Engadin sightline). The post-meal frame in St Moritz is the most extended on this list.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where should I propose at a St Moritz restaurant in 2026?
Da Vittorio at the Carlton is the editorial first pick — two Michelin stars, the Cerea brothers’ Italian regional cooking, and the most extended-formal evening register in the village. For a sharing-format proposal that builds the moment collaboratively, IGNIV by Andreas Caminada at Badrutt’s Palace is the editorial alternative (two stars, sharing menu). For a proposal away from the central Dorf density, Ecco at the Giardino Mountain (one star, Champfèr) is the move. For the most historically loaded room, the 1658 Chesa Veglia Patrizier Stuben across from Badrutt’s Palace.
How much should I budget for a St Moritz proposal dinner?
CHF 600–CHF 920 for two with the wine pairing at the starred rooms (Da Vittorio, IGNIV, Ecco). CHF 420–CHF 620 at the one-star and starred-adjacent rooms (Cà d’Oro at Kempinski, Chesa Veglia Patrizier Stuben, Talvò by Dalsass). CHF 340–CHF 440 at the Engadiner Stube at the Kulm. Captain tips in Switzerland are service-included but a CHF 80–CHF 120 cash tip for proposal coordination is the standard appreciation.
How far in advance should I book a St Moritz proposal restaurant?
Four to six months for the Christmas-New-Year window at every venue on this list. Eight weeks for Da Vittorio, IGNIV and Ecco at any time in February and March. Five to six weeks for Cà d’Oro, Chesa Veglia Patrizier Stuben and Talvò. Three weeks for the Engadiner Stube. The booking pressure drops noticeably after the Engadin Snow Polo tournament finishes (typically end of January); late March is the editorial sweet spot for last-minute proposals.
Will the St Moritz restaurant help arrange the proposal?
Yes — every venue on this list runs proposals routinely. Da Vittorio’s Davide Caranchini handles the dessert cue. IGNIV’s sommelier Lukas Furrer coordinates the sharing-menu petit-four moment. Ecco’s Rolf Fliegauf team arranges a custom-message chocolate course. Chesa Veglia’s Badrutt’s Palace front-of-house handles the Patrizier Stuben booking. Talvò’s Lorena Dalsass personally choreographs the cue. The Engadiner Stube at the Kulm has the most rehearsed grand-old-hotel discretion.
Is St Moritz worth a forty-eight-hour weekend for a proposal?
Yes — uniquely on this list, the resort holds enough proposal-grade rooms inside a fifteen-minute walking radius (Da Vittorio at the Carlton, IGNIV at Badrutt’s Palace, Chesa Veglia, the Engadiner Stube at the Kulm) that a couple can book three different starred or starred-adjacent dinners across the same weekend without leaving the village. The editorial sequence: Friday at the Engadiner Stube (warm-up), Saturday at Da Vittorio or IGNIV (the proposal), Sunday lunch at Talvò in Champfèr (the celebration).
Can I propose during the Engadin Snow Polo or White Turf weekend?
No. The Engadin Snow Polo (end of January) and White Turf (every February Sunday) bring 12,000-plus weekend visitors into the resort and the booking pressure at every venue on this list is at its absolute peak. Da Vittorio and IGNIV are gone six months ahead for those weekends. The mid-week before and after each event is the better window. For couples who want the event itself as the daytime frame and the proposal in the evening, book the Wednesday or Thursday between the two White Turf Sundays.
What time of year should I propose in St Moritz?
Late February through mid-March is the editorial sweet spot — the snow is at its deepest, the daylight extends to 18:30 by mid-March, the village runs at peak operational density, and the booking pressure has dropped from the Christmas-New-Year and Snow Polo peaks. Avoid late November and early December (the snow is unreliable and several venues are still closed), the first week of January (post-New-Year crowd density), and the post-Easter period (most starred kitchens close until December).
Are any St Moritz proposal restaurants car-accessible?
Every village-Dorf venue is walkable from Badrutt’s Palace or the Kulm Hotel in under fifteen minutes — Da Vittorio at the Carlton (eight minutes), IGNIV at Badrutt’s (in-hotel), Chesa Veglia (thirty seconds across Via Serlas), the Engadiner Stube at the Kulm (in-hotel). The Champfèr venues (Ecco at Giardino, Talvò by Dalsass) require a ten-minute taxi from Dorf — both hotels and restaurants will arrange the car at booking. Cà d’Oro at the Kempinski runs a continuous hotel shuttle from Dorf to St Moritz Bad.

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